On Tue, Dec 21, 2004 at 10:26:48AM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Richard Huxton <dev@archonet.com> writes:
> > However, one thing you can say is that if block B hasn't been written to
> > since you last checked, then any blocks older than that haven't been
> > written to either.
>
> [ itch... ] Can you? I don't recall exactly when a block gets pushed
> up the ARC list during a ReadBuffer/WriteBuffer cycle, but at the very
> least I'd have to say that this assumption is vulnerable to race
> conditions.
>
> Also, the cntxDirty mechanism allows a block to be dirtied without
> changing the ARC state at all. I am not very clear on whether Vadim
> added that mechanism just for performance or because there were
> fundamental deadlock issues without it; but in either case we'd have
> to think long and hard about taking it out for the bgwriter's benefit.
OTOH, ISTM that it's ok if the bgwriter occasionally misses blocks.
These blocks would either result in a backend or the checkpointer having
to write out a block (not so great), or the bgwriter could occasionally
ignore it's bookmart and restart it's scan from the LRU.
Of course I'm assuming that any race-conditions could be made to impact
only the bgwriter and nothing else, which may be a bad assumption.
--
Jim C. Nasby, Database Consultant decibel@decibel.org
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